Non-adherence to pain medication increases risk of postoperative frozen shoulder
Background: Postoperative frozen shoulder (FS) or adhesive capsulitis is a relatively frequent complication (5-20%), even after simple arthroscopic shoulder surgeries. The pathophysiology is still unclear, but psychological factors may play a pivotal role. From clinical experience, we hypothesized t...
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Wolters Kluwer Medknow Publications
2021-01-01
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doaj-02f282cd9cda4974b4670d544674527d2021-10-07T05:05:43ZengWolters Kluwer Medknow PublicationsInternational Journal of Preventive Medicine2008-78022008-82132021-01-0112111511510.4103/ijpvm.IJPVM_499_20Non-adherence to pain medication increases risk of postoperative frozen shoulderRichard NiehausLukas UrbanschitzJakob SchumannChristopher G LenzFlorian A FrankStefan EhrendorferKarim EidBackground: Postoperative frozen shoulder (FS) or adhesive capsulitis is a relatively frequent complication (5-20%), even after simple arthroscopic shoulder surgeries. The pathophysiology is still unclear, but psychological factors may play a pivotal role. From clinical experience, we hypothesized that patients, who are reluctant to take medications, particularly “pain-killers,” have an increased incidence of postoperative FS. Methods: We identified twenty patients who underwent limited arthroscopic operations of the shoulder and developed postoperative FS. Twenty patients with matching type of surgery, age, and gender served as control group (n = 20). All patients were at least one year postoperative and asymptomatic at the time of examination. Demographic data, the patient's adherence to self-medication (including self-medicating scale, SMS), development the Quality of life (QoL), and depression scale (PHQ-4-questionnaire) were assessed. Results: Patients with FS had a 2-fold longer rehabilitation and 3-fold longer work inability compared to the patients without FS (P < 0.009 and P < 0.003, respectively). Subjective shoulder value SSV (P = 0.075) and post-operative improvement of QoL (P = 0.292) did not differ among the groups. There was a trend—but not significant—toward less coherence to self-medication in the FS-group (26.50 vs. 29.50; P = 0.094). Patients with postoperative FS significantly more often stated not to have “taken pain-killers as prescribed” (P = 0.003). Conclusions: Patients reporting unwillingness to take the prescribed pain medications had a significantly higher incidence of postoperative FS. It remains unclear whether the increased risk of developing FS is due to reduced postoperative analgesia or a critical attitude toward taking medication. However, patients who are reluctant to take painkillers should strongly be encouraged to take medications as prescribed.http://www.ijpvmjournal.net/article.asp?issn=2008-7802;year=2021;volume=12;issue=1;spage=115;epage=115;aulast=Niehausadhesive capsulitisfrozen shoulderpainkillerspost-operative adherenceshoulder arthroscopy |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Richard Niehaus Lukas Urbanschitz Jakob Schumann Christopher G Lenz Florian A Frank Stefan Ehrendorfer Karim Eid |
spellingShingle |
Richard Niehaus Lukas Urbanschitz Jakob Schumann Christopher G Lenz Florian A Frank Stefan Ehrendorfer Karim Eid Non-adherence to pain medication increases risk of postoperative frozen shoulder International Journal of Preventive Medicine adhesive capsulitis frozen shoulder painkillers post-operative adherence shoulder arthroscopy |
author_facet |
Richard Niehaus Lukas Urbanschitz Jakob Schumann Christopher G Lenz Florian A Frank Stefan Ehrendorfer Karim Eid |
author_sort |
Richard Niehaus |
title |
Non-adherence to pain medication increases risk of postoperative frozen shoulder |
title_short |
Non-adherence to pain medication increases risk of postoperative frozen shoulder |
title_full |
Non-adherence to pain medication increases risk of postoperative frozen shoulder |
title_fullStr |
Non-adherence to pain medication increases risk of postoperative frozen shoulder |
title_full_unstemmed |
Non-adherence to pain medication increases risk of postoperative frozen shoulder |
title_sort |
non-adherence to pain medication increases risk of postoperative frozen shoulder |
publisher |
Wolters Kluwer Medknow Publications |
series |
International Journal of Preventive Medicine |
issn |
2008-7802 2008-8213 |
publishDate |
2021-01-01 |
description |
Background: Postoperative frozen shoulder (FS) or adhesive capsulitis is a relatively frequent complication (5-20%), even after simple arthroscopic shoulder surgeries. The pathophysiology is still unclear, but psychological factors may play a pivotal role. From clinical experience, we hypothesized that patients, who are reluctant to take medications, particularly “pain-killers,” have an increased incidence of postoperative FS. Methods: We identified twenty patients who underwent limited arthroscopic operations of the shoulder and developed postoperative FS. Twenty patients with matching type of surgery, age, and gender served as control group (n = 20). All patients were at least one year postoperative and asymptomatic at the time of examination. Demographic data, the patient's adherence to self-medication (including self-medicating scale, SMS), development the Quality of life (QoL), and depression scale (PHQ-4-questionnaire) were assessed. Results: Patients with FS had a 2-fold longer rehabilitation and 3-fold longer work inability compared to the patients without FS (P < 0.009 and P < 0.003, respectively). Subjective shoulder value SSV (P = 0.075) and post-operative improvement of QoL (P = 0.292) did not differ among the groups. There was a trend—but not significant—toward less coherence to self-medication in the FS-group (26.50 vs. 29.50; P = 0.094). Patients with postoperative FS significantly more often stated not to have “taken pain-killers as prescribed” (P = 0.003). Conclusions: Patients reporting unwillingness to take the prescribed pain medications had a significantly higher incidence of postoperative FS. It remains unclear whether the increased risk of developing FS is due to reduced postoperative analgesia or a critical attitude toward taking medication. However, patients who are reluctant to take painkillers should strongly be encouraged to take medications as prescribed. |
topic |
adhesive capsulitis frozen shoulder painkillers post-operative adherence shoulder arthroscopy |
url |
http://www.ijpvmjournal.net/article.asp?issn=2008-7802;year=2021;volume=12;issue=1;spage=115;epage=115;aulast=Niehaus |
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